Marie T Williams1, Hayley Lewthwaite2, Dina Brooks3, Dennis Jensen4, Sara J Abdallah4, Kylie N Johnston5. 1. Innovation, Implementation And Clinical Translation in Health (IIMPACT), School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. Electronic address: marie.williams@unisa.edu.au. 2. Innovation, Implementation And Clinical Translation in Health (IIMPACT), School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia; Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education, Faculty of Education, McGill University, Montreal, Canada. 3. School of Rehabilitation Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada; Department of Respiratory Medicine, West Park Healthcare Centre, Toronto, Canada. 4. Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education, Faculty of Education, McGill University, Montreal, Canada. 5. School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Explanations provided by health professionals may underpin helpful or harmful symptom beliefs and expectations of people living with chronic breathlessness. OBJECTIVES: This study sought perspectives from health professionals with clinical/research expertise in chronic breathlessness on priority issues in chronic breathlessness explanations and research. METHODS: Authors (n = 74) of publications specific to chronic breathlessness were invited to a three-round Delphi survey. Responses to open-ended questions (Round 1 "What is important to: include/avoid when explaining chronic breathlessness; prioritize in research?") were transformed to Likert scale (1-9) items for rating in subsequent rounds. A priori consensus was defined as ≥70% of respondents rating an item as important (Likert rating 7-9) and interquartile range ≤2. RESULTS: Of the 31 Round 1 respondents (nine countries, five professional disciplines), 24 (77%) completed Rounds 2 and 3. Sixty-three items met consensus (include n = 28; avoid n = 9; research n = 26). Explanations of chronic breathlessness should use patient-centered communication; acknowledge the distress, variability, and importance of this sensation; emphasize current management principles; clarify maladaptive beliefs and expectations; and avoid moral culpability and inappropriate reassurance. Research priorities included the need 1) for a comprehensive understanding of breathlessness science; 2) to optimize, explore, and develop effective interventions, both pharmacological and nonpharmacological; and 3) determine effective models of care including strategies for education and training of health professionals and people caring for, or living with, chronic breathlessness. CONCLUSION: These consensus-based concepts for chronic breathlessness explanations and research provide a starting point for conversations between patients, carers, clinicians, and researchers within the chronic breathlessness community.
CONTEXT: Explanations provided by health professionals may underpin helpful or harmful symptom beliefs and expectations of people living with chronic breathlessness. OBJECTIVES: This study sought perspectives from health professionals with clinical/research expertise in chronic breathlessness on priority issues in chronic breathlessness explanations and research. METHODS: Authors (n = 74) of publications specific to chronic breathlessness were invited to a three-round Delphi survey. Responses to open-ended questions (Round 1 "What is important to: include/avoid when explaining chronic breathlessness; prioritize in research?") were transformed to Likert scale (1-9) items for rating in subsequent rounds. A priori consensus was defined as ≥70% of respondents rating an item as important (Likert rating 7-9) and interquartile range ≤2. RESULTS: Of the 31 Round 1 respondents (nine countries, five professional disciplines), 24 (77%) completed Rounds 2 and 3. Sixty-three items met consensus (include n = 28; avoid n = 9; research n = 26). Explanations of chronic breathlessness should use patient-centered communication; acknowledge the distress, variability, and importance of this sensation; emphasize current management principles; clarify maladaptive beliefs and expectations; and avoid moral culpability and inappropriate reassurance. Research priorities included the need 1) for a comprehensive understanding of breathlessness science; 2) to optimize, explore, and develop effective interventions, both pharmacological and nonpharmacological; and 3) determine effective models of care including strategies for education and training of health professionals and people caring for, or living with, chronic breathlessness. CONCLUSION: These consensus-based concepts for chronic breathlessness explanations and research provide a starting point for conversations between patients, carers, clinicians, and researchers within the chronic breathlessness community.
Authors: Jean-Marie Grosbois; Sarah Gephine; Maeva Kyheng; Julie Henguelle; Olivier Le Rouzic; Didier Saey; François Maltais; Cecile Chenivesse Journal: BMJ Open Respir Res Date: 2022-01
Authors: Kylie N Johnston; Mary Young; Debra Kay; Sara Booth; Anna Spathis; Marie T Williams Journal: BMC Med Educ Date: 2020-03-30 Impact factor: 2.463